Steel Mine Timbers 


CARNEGIE STEEL COMPANY 


PITTSBURG, PA. 









. < •> . -■ ■ ‘ ' . >- > • • w* -frv. j ; s •*, . \,i.\ 

' : " 

: - ^jSK* JagF -SP^/%- v-.r.r 

j• : 'i-\:» . . - uH. •f.'k’iv'-. t '•' *vf ,•; -• • ^ *v .. < ?. 

t: -< : -: r <> • , \\ • ... : • ' ’ .>•- • >*•. * . ■ r • ... r-. - 

if:.-; ..-h .r : :: *j 

* ■ , • . 

' . • . ... I .• • •■ ■-•! . • . • \ > * V 1 


'-rfi--A tot-’ ■ ... . 


iOji j-. ;• y? ,};1 


&.i- %;•■,■(.':• . h':.; '.• if ' '• •„»?• : C'J'Hi. 












ENTRANCE TO A MODERN MINE, ALLPORT COAL COMPANY, BARNESBORO, PA 
















STEEL MINE TIMBERS 


TYPES 

OF CONSTRUCTION AND 
EXAMPLES 
OF INSTALLATION 



CARNEGIE STEEL COMPANY 

PITTSBURG, PA. 


1911 






G6794MMM411 



Copyrig-ht, 1911, by 
CARNEGIE STEEL COMPANY 
PITTSBURG, PA. 


* c 


Third Edition: April 20th, 1911 



©C1A286730 


STEEL 

MINE 

TIMBERS 



4 INCH H-SECTION ROOF SUPPORTS. ADRIAN MINES, ROCHESTER & PITTSBURG COAL & IRON CO., PUNXSUTAWNEY, PA 



J8 





ROOF 

SUPPORTS 


13 








STEEL 

MINE 

TIMBERS 


ROOF 

SUPPORTS 



6-INCH I-BEAM ROOF SUPPORTS, ON BRICK WALLS, LEGQITTS CREEK COLLIERY, DELAWARE & HUDSON COMPANY, SCRANTON, PA. 


14 




The use of steel roof supports resting 1 on wooden props may be excellent where the 
strata are approximately level and the loads practically downward. Where, how¬ 
ever, the strata are inclined, loads heavy and the sides of the excavation soft, three- 
piece supports are required and these may be most economically and permanently 
framed in steel. For the legs of the three-piece gangway support the best form of 
section is the H-beam, which is particularly adapted for carrying loads in compression and is 
that form of rolled shape giving the largest compressive resistance in proportion to its weight. 
The use of the H-beam may be said to mark an era in the history of mine timbering when it was 
introduced in England in 1885 by the Darlington Iron & Steel Company. Its introduction into the 
United States by the Carnegie Steel Company has made possible the more extended and econom¬ 
ical use of steel for gangway supports. 

The diagrams which follow show standard types of steel gangway supports, an adjustable 
set framed with channels and pin connections as modified after the original design of R. V. Norris, 
also a type of channel set in which adjustability has been eliminated, together with two types of 
sets with H-beam legs. Where the loads are very heavy the channel sets will be found economi¬ 
cal. In most cases the range of H-beams rolled will be sufficient, as the largest size H-beam is 
equivalent in strength to seasoned 14" round long leaf yellow pine timbers or seasoned 12 x 12" 
long leaf yellow pine timbers. 

The use of adjustable gangway supports is not recommended. The three-piece steel gang¬ 
way support framed with H-beam legs and I-beam collars is the exact equivalent of the three- 
piece wooden set and its most economical substitute. 

In the anthracite coal mining region are to be found long stretches of steel timbered gang¬ 
way in the mines of the leading companies, particularly in those of the Susquehanna Coal Com¬ 
pany and its subsidiaries, the Lehigh Valley Coal Company, etc. 

In No. 8 Tunnel of the Susquehanna Coal Company there are 62 sets of steel mine timbers 
spaced about five feet centers. The timbers used are a modification of Style F, the lug angles on 
the webs of the H-beams being omitted and the lug angles on the flanges being of double width. 
This is a double track tunnel. The center props have been eliminated and the wide open spaces 
mean safety and security with a minimum fire risk. 


STEEL 

MINE 

TIMBERS 


GANGWAY 

SUPPORTS 


mm 

15 


3Sja 














STEEL 

MINE 

TIMBERS 


GANGWAY 

SUPPORTS 


Style F gangway supports are also used in the double track heading at the foot of the Maltby 
Shaft, Lehigh Valley Coal Company. 

The 85 sets of Style F steel mine timbers used in the mine of the Allport Coal Company 
weighed about 372 pounds each, or one-third the weight of the necessary framing in wood, were 
lagged in place with 2" plank and concreted up to car height. The installation was conducted by 
the ordinary mine workmen and complete sets were erected in eight minutes each by the watch. 
Such a construction is fireproof, foolproof, germproof. 

1500 feet of steel gangway in the Williamstown Colliery of the Summit Branch Mining Com¬ 
pany is timbered with channel legs, I-beam collars and cast bases after Mr. R. V. Norris’s original 
design. At the Stearns Shaft of the Susquehanna Coal Company the original sets put in by Mr. 
Norris in 1897 are still in place giving excellent service without material deterioration. 

Style E gangway support is the type in favor with the Lehigh & Wilkes-Barre Coal Com¬ 
pany. The advantage derived from the freedom of the heading from central props is particularly 
well seen wherever it is necessary to run in curves or to place tracks at different levels. 

At Honeybrook Colliery No. 5 of the Lehigh & Wilkes-Barre Coal Company Style E framing 
with H-beam posts provides for both a pump room and a gangway. The installation is lagged with 
old rails and plates, the floor of the pump room is cemented and a cement gutter along the track 
takes care of the moisture. The relative sizes of steel and wood mine timbers can be well seen in 
the illustration of this installation. Certainly the open spaces, good ventilation and fireproof char¬ 
acter of this installation will outweigh in operation and maintenance large differences in first cost. 

The same relative advantages of steel as compared with wood are to be seen in the instal¬ 
lation of Style F steel gangway supports at the colliery of the Oak Hill Coal Company, Miners- 
ville, Pa. The central prop on a double track gangway may be necessary in wooden framing. 
Its presence is always a detriment to free operation and a menace to lives and property. Its room 
is always to be preferred to its company. 

Among the excellent older installations of steel mine timbers are those of the Berwind- 
White Coal Mining Company in Eureka Mine No. 36. The collars are 12" beams, the legs are 8" 
channels and the sets are lagged in part with 30-pound rails and in part with lumber. The sim¬ 
plicity of the construction is shown in the fact that the plain material was bought at the rolling 
mill and the fabrication done in the company’s own shop by its own workmen. 


16 





Steel Gangway Support, Style E 


Style B. The modern form of the adjustable gang¬ 
way support, comparatively high in cost where loads 
are light but adapted to almost any requirement of 
strength and recommended where adjustability is con¬ 
sidered necessary. Made of an I-beam collar and 
channel legs, the two pieces each of which are sepa¬ 
rated by gas pipe separators. Pins are used at the 
top of the legs, one passing through the beam, cast 
iron distance pieces and channels, and one through 
the channels only. Steel wedges driven under the 
collar serve to distribute the load on both pins. The 
extra holes serve to take up differences in width or 
height. 


STEEL 

MINE 

TIMBERS 


GANGWAY 

SUPPORTS 


Style E. An economical form of gangway support 
made of channel legs and I-beam collar, not adjust¬ 
able but similar to installations in which steel beams 
are used with wooden legs. The use of the steel chan¬ 
nel legs avoids a large waste in framing customary in 
wooden timbering. The two channels forming the leg 
are connected by bolts and separators, carry angle 
brackets at their tops on which the collar rests and 
foot on a steel plate to which bars are riveted to pre¬ 
vent motion at the bases. If the footing is good, the 
base plates may be omitted or plain plates used. 
Angles riveted to the channels transmit the load from 
the collar; bent angle lugs prevent undue side motion. 


17 






























STEEL 

MINE 

TIMBERS 


GANGWAY 

SUPPORTS 




Steel Gangway Support, Style G 


Style F. The ideal form of gangway support for 
simplicity and economy, combining the high cross 
bending strength of the I-beam collar with the high 
compressive strength of the H-beam leg, the exact 
equivalent of the three-piece wooden set. The lug 
angles at the top prevent side motion and absolutely 
plain plates are used for bearings. If the footing is 
good, and the plates are omitted, there are but three 
pieces to handle. Erected much more quickly and 
easily than wooden sets, with the least possible mate¬ 
rial and weight for a given load. Prime favorites with 
all who have used them. 


Style G. A form of gangway support identical 
with Style F except that bars are used to prevent 
side motion instead of angles; in much favor with 
some users. 

The angle lugs or bars shown with styles F and 
G are sufficient for ordinary conditions of loading. 
Where heavy deep beam collars are required in con¬ 
nection with heavy H-beam legs, or where strata are 
steeply inclined, angles or bars may be required with 
more than one set of bolts. In such cases 6" x 6" 
angles or 6" bars may be utilized instead of the 3" x 
2P' angles or 3" bars usually furnished. 


18 



























STYLE F GANGWAY SUPPORTS, No. 8 TUNNEL, SUSQUEHANNA COAL COMPANY, NANT1COKE, PA. 


STEEL 

MINE 

TIMBERS 


GANGWAY 

SUPPORTS 


19 




































STEEL 

MINE 

TIMBERS 


GANGWAY 

SUPPORTS 



STYLE F GANGWAY SUPPORTS, FOOT OF MALTBY SHAFT, LEHIGH VALLEY COAL COMPANY, WILKESBARRE, PA. 


20 







A MODERN MINE-INSIDE—STYLE F GANGWAY SUPPORTS, ALLPORT COAL COMPANY, BARNESBORO, PA. 


STEEL 

MINE 

TIMBERS 


GANGWAY 

SUPPORTS 


21 












STEEL 

MINE 

TIMBERS 


GANGWAY 

SUPPORTS 



STEEL TIMBERED GANGWAY 1500 FEET LONG, STYLE A SETS, SUMMIT BRANCH MINING COMPANY, WILLIAMSTOWN, PA. 


22 











STEEL 

MINE 

TIMBERS 


GANGWAY 

SUPPORTS 


23 






















STEEL 

MINE 

TIMBERS 


GANGWAY 

SUPPORTS 



STYLE E GANGWAY SUPPORTS, STATION 100, MAXWELL COLLIERY No. 20, LEHIGH & WILKESBARRE COAL COMPANY 


24 











STEEL 

MINE 

TIMBERS 


GANGWAY 

SUPPORTS 


25 










STEEL 

MINE 

TIMBERS 


GANGWAY 

SUPPORTS 







.- ‘ 




tv ■. ; i . 

py?;: 

,-—- 

■ 




STYLE F GANGWAY SUPPORTS, OAK HILL COAL COMPANY, MINERSVILLE, PA. 


26 














STYLE A GANGWAY SUPPORTS, EUREKA MINE No. 36, BERWIND=WHITE COAL MINING COMPANY, WINDBER, PA 


STEEL 

MINE 

TIMBERS 


GANGWAY 

SUPPORTS 


27 


















STEEL 

MINE 

TIMBERS 


STABLES 
AND PUMP 
HOUSES 


Every consideration which may be adduced for the building of fireproof structures above 
ground avails with greater force for the elimination of inflammable materials, so far as possible, 
from underground structures. The fire risk is always with us and examples might be enumerated 
to emphasize the importance of the use at recognized points of danger of those materials of con¬ 
struction which are fitted to reduce, if not entirely to avoid, the economic wastes due to the use 
of wooden timbers in locations for which they are not in every respect adapted. Safety from fire 
losses does not necessarily mean eternal vigilance, though vigilance needs always to be exercised 
in the small things of mine maintenance and operation as well as in the large ones. The fire 
which took place on August 26th, 1908, in the mine of the Hailey-Ola Coal Company, at Hailey- 
ville, Okla., by which 29 miners out of 132 lost their lives, was due to the substitution of crude 
petroleum for lubricating oil furnished the miners for the lubrication of cars. The notably disas¬ 
trous fire which started on November 13th, 1909, in the mine of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. 
Paul Railway, at Cherry, Ill., was due to the ignition of hay being trammed into the mines for 
feeding the mules. 

In the mine of the Maryd Coal Company, at Maryd, Pa., little or no difficulty is experienced 
from squeezes, though an occasional smooth is encountered. 25 sets of Style F mine timbers, 
however, are used in this mine for the purpose of fire protection in the underground stable shown 
in the illustration. The high roof and the large space provided certainly conduce to cleanliness 
and good ventilation and, therefore, much more sanitary conditions for the motive power of the 
mine than the ordinary wooden framing. 

While the Stearns Shaft of the Susquehanna Coal Company is the first recorded instance in 
the United States of a scientifically designed steel framed heading, the earliest example of the 
steel framed pump house is probably that of the Lehigh Valley Coal Company at Hazleton, Pa., 
built in 1897, where 12" 35 lb. I-beams were used for framing resting on and joined by special 
castings and lagged with steel rails backed with concrete. 

The simplification in detail which has attended the increased use of steel in mine timbering 
is seen in the illustration of the pump house at No. 5 Mine, Pennsylvania Coal & Coke Company, 


28 



23.S lbs. m | m H Se 


STEEL 

MINE 

TIMBERS 



r. 

CO 

<D 

c 

i 


c 

<D 

E 

+-> 

Q. 

E 

o 

o 

Q) 

> 

Li- 



typical STEEL FRAMING FOR FIVE COMPARTMENT MINE SHAFT 


MINE 

SHAFTS 


37 





























































































STEEL 

MINE 

TIMBERS 


MINE 

SHAFTS 



HOISTING SHAFT WITH H=BEAM GUIDES AND BUNTONS, TENNESSEE COAL, IRON & RAILROAD COMPANY, ENSLEY, ALA. 


38 




































































































































05 

> 


C/5 


O 

X 


c 

05 

a 

E 

o 

O 

(5 

o 

O 


0 0 
cc •- 

55 ^ 


o 

Lj- 


0 

0 

.Q 

05 

c 

c 

< 



STEEL CHANNEL BUNTONS IN HOISTING SHAFT, FOUR STATE COAL COMPANY, ANNABELLE MINE, WORTHINGTON, VV. VA. 


I STEEL 
MINE 
TIMBERS 


MINE 

SHAFTS 






39 






























































































































MAY 6 1911! 


STEEL 

MINE 

TIMBERS 



STEEL MINE TIMBERS IN STOCK. NOT HOW BIG A PILE BUT HOW MANY. STRONGER THAN WOOD, WITH LESS BULK AND LESS WEIGHT 


40 


-TNr-jt 








. %: ,■ ■■;: ■ .•;/ ■>, •• .■ 
- '.<-•} -• V • \ iV ’ ‘ f'j- - -W. 

. / .;/'■ -V ; . *■ .? 7 ;.; ‘ 


N|«$# PI; ‘ 


iffy'- 




«fe; sMgWf: jgl iigMiHl 


~\>? r 










■ ■ 


. --t j' * 


3 «' L 


• Y -/. 


.tr, . • i ■ * 7 ? .''',•■* •••*■ 

* -T- 

. - . 4 • 


7 -r: 


■ ty :-T ■' 




















































CARNEGIE STEEL COMPANY 


Pittsburg 


Birmingham 
Boston . . 

Buffalo . . 

Chicago . . 

Cincinnati . 
Cleveland . 
Denver . . 

Detroit . . 

New Orleans 
New York . 
Philadelphia 
Pittsburg . 
Portland 
San Francisco 
St. Louis 
St. Paul . . 


GENERAL OFFICES 

. ..Carnegie Building 

DISTRICT OFFICES 

.Brown-Marx Building 

.120 Franklin Street 

.Ellicott Square Building 

.Commercial National Bank Building 

.Union Trust Building 

.Rockefeller Building 

.First National Bank Building 

.Ford Building 

.Maison Blanche 

.Hudson Terminal, 30 Church Street 

. Pennsylvania Building 

.Carnegie Building 

.Wells-Fargo Building 

.Crocker Building 

.Third National Bank Building 

. Pioneer Press Building 


Export Representatives: United States Steel Products Company, New York 





















